"Slaughter" house — the scandal inside ANZ

Porsches and $5 million bonuses, drinking and late night strip clubbing — we go deep into one of Australia’s biggest ever corporate investigations.
This is an alleged rate-rigging scandal that engulfed our third largest bank, dragging in some of the most senior people in the industry. But has everyone involved been held accountable?
Mario Christodoulou investigates.

Proxy war: The outsiders campaigning for the major parties

This election campaign has involved more than political candidates and parties on the hustings.
We’ve seen grassroots community groups, political activist organisations and social media players getting involved too.
But, just how influential are they? And is there enough scrutiny on them? Katherine Gregory investigates.

From bias to brutality: How Australia is failing minority groups

They’ve been spat on, punched in the face, and told to go back to where they came from.
Minority groups in Australia insist hate crimes are on the rise since the Christchurch massacre.
There have been thousands of reports of property damage as well as verbal and physical abuse arising from racial discrimination.
So why have so few people been convicted? Hagar Cohen investigates.

Shitposting to the Senate: How the alt-right infiltrated Parliament

The global rise of the alt-right movement has caught the attention of politicians and police in Australia.
But few could have predicted its followers would have already found a home in our federal parliament.
Background Briefing has obtained leaked messages revealing Senator Fraser Anning has employed staff with connections to fascist groups.
The messages also detail a secret plan to disrupt the current election campaign with racist stunts in order to help re-elect him.
Alex Mann investigates.

The sexual abuse scandal nobody's talking about

When you place a parent or loved one into a nursing home, you trust they'll be looked after by staff.
But sexual abuse in aged care is on the rise and the perpetrators are often the very people paid to care for residents.
The disturbing trend has been allowed to flourish in the absence of mandatory reporting and a national register of employees.
Anne Connolly investigates.